Wells, James Madison, 1808-1899
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Wells, James Madison, 1808-1899
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Name :
Wells, James Madison, 1808-1899
Wells, James Madison
Name Components
Name :
Wells, James Madison
Wells, Madison, 1808-1899
Name Components
Name :
Wells, Madison, 1808-1899
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Born near Alexandria, La., in 1808, James Madison Wells was the son of Samuel Levi Wells II, a member of the Louisiana constitutional convention in 1811. After completing his education at St. Joseph's College in Bardstown, Ky., and at Cincinnati Law School, Wells returned to Louisiana to manage his family's plantations. He married Mary Ann Scott in 1833. Wells was an active Whig but transferred his allegiance to the Democratic Party after the Whig Party's collapse in the 1850s, supporting Stephen A. Douglas, the Democratic candidate for president in 1860. A staunch Unionist during the Civil War, Wells served as governor of Louisiana from 1865 to 1867. Ousted from office by General Philip Sheridan due to his failure to control violence arising from controversial actions taken during the Louisiana constitutional convention in 1864, Wells returned to his home parish and became a notorious scalawag known by his political opponents as "Mad Wells." Active in Republican politics in Louisiana, Wells was appointed chairman of the state returning board, which was responsible for determining the legality of ballots, in 1873. His efforts to assist Republicans in elections helped earn him appointment as surveyor of the Port of New Orleans from 1874-1880. He died at his home in Rapides Parish in 1899.
Born near Alexandria, La., in 1808, James Madison Wells was the son of Samuel Levi Wells II, a member of the Louisiana constitutional convention in 1811. After completing his education at St. Joseph's College in Bardstown, Ky., and at Cincinnati Law School, Wells returned to Louisiana to manage his family's plantations. He married Mary Ann Scott in 1833. Wells was an active Whig but transferred his allegiance to the Democratic Party after the Whig Party's collapse in the 1850s, supporting Stephen A. Douglas, the Democratic candidate for president in 1860. A staunch unionist during the Civil War, Wells served as governor of Louisiana from 1865 to 1867. Ousted from office by General Philip Sheridan due to his failure to control violence arising from controversial actions taken during the Louisiana constitutional convention in 1864, Wells returned to his home parish and became a notorious scalawag known by his political opponents as "Mad Wells." Active in Republican politics in Louisiana, Wells was appointed chairman of the state returning board, which was responsible for determining the legality of ballots, in 1873. His efforts to assist Republicans in elections helped earn him appointment as surveyor of the Port of New Orleans from 1874-1880. He died at his home in Rapides Parish in 1899.
Governor of Louisiana and plantation owner.
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https://viaf.org/viaf/73126978
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q545035
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n96097054
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n96097054
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Government liability
Land owners
Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877)
Red River Expedition, 1864
Restitution
Unionists (United States Civil War)
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Generals
Governors
Plantation owners
Plantation owners
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Places
Louisiana
AssociatedPlace
Louisiana
AssociatedPlace
Louisiana
AssociatedPlace
Rapides Parish (La.)
AssociatedPlace
Louisiana
AssociatedPlace
Louisiana--Rapides Parish
AssociatedPlace
Louisiana--Rapides Parish
AssociatedPlace
United States
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Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>